What determines the gain of the amp camp amp?
The ratio of R11 and R12 which is 10k and 39.2k in the DIY kits.
Congratulations Tony!
You get the 10,000th post prize. Which is keeping up the good work...
Alan
do i get a lollipop?
I have a pair of Amp Camp amps and I had to put them in a cabinet that really restricted air flow. They were getting to 60-61 deg c heatsink temp. Not good.
The solution for me was to buy an Aircom T10 "cooling system". The T10 has three fans and sits on top of the ACAs and exhausts air to the front.
I run the T10 with the fans full blast and they are barely audible.
The heat sinks are now running at 30-31 deg c. with an ambient temp of 25 deg c.
Just thought I'd share this in case others were having similar problems.
The solution for me was to buy an Aircom T10 "cooling system". The T10 has three fans and sits on top of the ACAs and exhausts air to the front.
I run the T10 with the fans full blast and they are barely audible.
The heat sinks are now running at 30-31 deg c. with an ambient temp of 25 deg c.
Just thought I'd share this in case others were having similar problems.
If anyone wants to go that far, the more efficient way would probably be to use a liquid cooling system for a PC and cool the heat sinks directly with liquid, instead of trying to cool the air that flows over the heat sinks. Not that I have tried....
Peltier coolers would be easier.
Just a small fan doubles heatsink efficiency, and/or you can throw a resistor inline to slow a larger fan down to be really quiet. Too big a resistor and they won’t start though. Nelson P. had a minimal circuit that started the fan on high and then lowered the voltage once it was moving.
Liquid cooling still requires a heatsink called a radiator. Possibly helpful for a huge class A amp but over engineering for an ACA by 5.
I can’t see why to install an entire expensive cooling system, when a bit larger heatsink is all that’s needed to work excellently
Liquid cooling still requires a heatsink called a radiator. Possibly helpful for a huge class A amp but over engineering for an ACA by 5.
I can’t see why to install an entire expensive cooling system, when a bit larger heatsink is all that’s needed to work excellently
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as Variac wrote: when a bit larger heatsink is all that’s needed to work excellently
yep...thats correct, my ACA is a medium size housing and with 24V and 1,56A bias its working on its limit:
Douk Audio DIY Aluminum Enclosure DAC Case Cabinet Amplifier Chassis New (W211*H90*D257mm)|amplifier chassis|dac caseaudio diy - AliExpressDouk Audio DIY Aluminum Enclosure DAC Case Cabinet Amplifier Chassis New (W211*H90*D257mm)
chris
yep...thats correct, my ACA is a medium size housing and with 24V and 1,56A bias its working on its limit:
Douk Audio DIY Aluminum Enclosure DAC Case Cabinet Amplifier Chassis New (W211*H90*D257mm)|amplifier chassis|dac caseaudio diy - AliExpressDouk Audio DIY Aluminum Enclosure DAC Case Cabinet Amplifier Chassis New (W211*H90*D257mm)
chris
Midpoint would be the best initial option but anywhere in the 20 to 80% of the range is OK. Its not critical as an initial setting. A third of the way around or two thirds of the way around, it doesn't matter. Just try not to have it set fully at one end or the other.
All that happens if you have it incorrect is that the sharing of power dissipated in the FET's shifts such that one will dissipate more and the other less.
All that happens if you have it incorrect is that the sharing of power dissipated in the FET's shifts such that one will dissipate more and the other less.
So I am looking to try the various operation modes of my 2 amps and I have arrived at the grown up world of balanced connections!! I don't have any balanced sources or preamps so wondered if an adapter cable such as this 404 Not Found would give a true balanced connection?
Midpoint would be the best initial option but anywhere in the 20 to 80% of the range is OK. Its not critical as an initial setting. A third of the way around or two thirds of the way around, it doesn't matter. Just try not to have it set fully at one end or the other.
All that happens if you have it incorrect is that the sharing of power dissipated in the FET's shifts such that one will dissipate more and the other less.
Thank you Mooly. Much appreciated and great weekend.
cheers
pos
Positron, i prefer the ten turn pots in place of the single turn pots, setting the half b+ bias takes time and patience...so depending on your wrists, you can overshoot the target and then go back and undershoot....several attempts are needed, and best to wait for the heatsinks to get warm enough...
looks like link didn't work but its a pair of male rca to female xlr cables
If it's just a cable, and if it's constructed the way many of them are, then the answer to your original question is no. It will not convert the signal to balanced.
Positron, i prefer the ten turn pots in place of the single turn pots, setting the half b+ bias takes time and patience...so depending on your wrists, you can overshoot the target and then go back and undershoot....several attempts are needed, and best to wait for the heatsinks to get warm enough...
Me as well Tony. I use two 15T pots in my speaker crossovers, one pot (tweaking) for blending the full range driver to woofer for seemless match, while the other pot (tweaking) adjusting the tonal balance of the full range driver itself. Even with 15T pots, the adjustment is extremely touchy. I really need 150T pots, not exaggerating.
cheers
pos
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